Wednesday, January 28, 2015

I think I should probably qualify my original, short comment (as
delayed as this is). I should also say outright that I don’t have much
time to participate in this discussion as I have a new baby, so
apologies for that in advance. I see further comments on the Redline
blog have also clarified some of what I felt was problematic with the text.

Despite agreeing with much of the text, I guess what jarred me was
the feeling that it was too black and white, and I couldn’t tell if the
Situationist quotes were for real or satire. I think what Olly says
about certain types of work leading to further investment in ‘the
system’ is spot on. To be aware of the contradictions in our work, and
to know how our work reproduces capital, is the first step in
challenging and ending that work.

But if I understand what this text suggests, it is that we should aim
our struggle towards particular jobs. Olly points out the flaws of this
approach, yet it still reads as if certain jobs have more potential for
class struggle over others.

I feel this is problematic. It makes me think of those who argue that
Auckland should be the main place of struggle, because that’s where the
biggest employers are. Or that the online financial sector should be
the place of struggle, because that is where the finance sector
operates.

Playing havoc with the economy or the financial sector might bring
down the economy or the financial sector, but this is not the same as
ending capitalism. As we know, capital is not a place, but a social
relationship. Thinking about where this relationship might best be
ruptured is useful, but trying to pinpoint exact locations of struggle
is extremely difficult and possibly a distraction from a broader,
collective approach.

Yet it is clear that certain work changes the way we relate to
others, as Olly points out. This division of labour, or the divisions
between ourselves, is super important – even more so now that many
people do not identify as workers, or as a class (this might not be such
a bad thing, depending on your point of view, but that is another
discussion altogether).

However most people can relate to discussions about work; to the
day-to-day content and activity of their jobs (waged or unwaged). I
think this is a potentially fruitful way forward for those of us who
wish to end the wage relation. Rather than spending time raising the
‘class consciousness’ of our peers in an abstract sense, we can get to
the heart of our work, and how we reproduce capital.

Feminist and marxist, Iris Young, talks about how the division of
labour may be a more useful way forward than that of class. In ‘The
Unhappy Marriage’ she writes that “the division of labour operates as a
category broader and more fundamental than class. Division of labour,
moreover, accounts for specific cleavages and contradictions within a
class… [it] can not only refer to a set of phenomena broader than that
of class, but also more concrete. It refers specifically to the activity
of labour itself, and the specific social and institutional relations
of that activity.” She goes on to talk about how this might speak to the
role of professionals – ie the subject of Olly’s text.

I find this approach helpful, because it makes clear that all work
reproduces the wage relation – whether you’re an academic, information
worker, or a kitchen hand – and that struggle around the activity of
work is potentially more fruitful than trying to pinpoint which jobs are
best to spend energy on.

In other words, what might be more constructive is to discuss the
‘what’ and ‘how’ of struggle against the wage relation, wherever that
struggle may be, rather than focusing on ‘where’.

This relates to another aspect of this text I find troublesome. It
feels like another anarchist text policing individuals within the
movement for their decisions. It seems to place a lot of emphasis on the
role of the individual anarchist. I get this, because that is what we
can relate to in our own lives and our own organising, as anarchists.
But this does not strike me as a way forward, but a further step inward.

Olly clarifies that we need a collective response to this on Redline, which is cool to hear.

Finally, I don’t agree with the ‘poverty of everyday life’ comment of
Olly’s. Struggle around our everyday life is a must, but poverty often
begets more poverty, and not struggle. I don’t like what this leads to
(even if it is unintentional) – that the worse off people’s jobs are, the
more they will struggle against it. If anything, history has shown that
struggle on a collective scale tends to take place when things are good
or improving for workers (a huge generalisation, I know).

I’m not sure if what I’m trying to say makes sense. I guess the short
of it is that the potential for mass, collective struggle against the
wage relation (and work) is all around us. We don’t need to narrow that
to a particular type of work, especially when there may be important
sites of struggle that is neglected in doing so. For example, could
capital reproduce itself without childcare and daycare centres? I’m not
saying this is a great example, but it is the type of question I’d love
to discuss, rather than trying to monitor the further personification of
capital by individual comrades.

Thursday, January 1, 2015

"You're an anarchist? What does that mean?" It's a common question I get asked. Through deliberate misinterpretation or unawareness, being an anarchist and what that means is completely foreign to many. As well as this, we are sometimes guilty of using unclear or unknown language when describing our ideas.

While I shed my evangelical fervor a long time ago, I still want to be able to talk with those around me about what drives my thoughts and actions.

Related to this is one of my goals for 2015: to speak and write in plain English. So I thought I would share what usually I say when I am asked what anarchism is.

Anarchists believe that no one should have the power to coerce or exploit another, that we could enjoy a life without capitalism, without government, and be free to decide how to live and work with those around us.

This is a huge simplification of a rich and complex movement, and leaves a lot out. But I find it is a nice conversation starter. I have used other terms at other times, such as 'wage labour' for 'capitalism', 'the state' for 'government', or 'organise' for 'decide'. However these are slightly more abstract or harder to relate to. Plus 'wage labour' does not cover all of what capitalism does to our relationships, our environment, and our lives.